This document summarizes a research study that investigated how engineering students describe their identities when solving typical academic engineering problems. Interviews were conducted with 8 engineering students about their approaches to open-ended and closed-ended materials engineering problems. The interviews were analyzed using a modification of Gee's framework for analyzing language-in-use. The analysis found that students were more likely to describe themselves using the language and identities of students, highlighting practices, expectations, and language associated with being a student, rather than as emerging engineers. The researchers suggest that academic problem solving may not encourage students to connect to identities related to professional engineering practice. Understanding how language shapes problem-solving practices and identities can provide insight for improving engineering education.